Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Nov 1965, p. 27

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

rice 26 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, November 11, 1963 | Peace And Pope \ | Highlights At UN h 2UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The Indian-Pakistani ceasefire stands out as the major accom- plishment of the current session of the homo weg General gr ighted by Pope Paul's historic plea ter fianea, The big [rye now is whe- ther the 117-nation assembly, which opened Sept. 21, will be able to stabilize the shaky cease fire with an agreement by the two countries to withdraw their forces to positions held before the Aug. 5 outbreak of hostili-|before Christmas. The Vietnam- ties over the disputed state ofjese war which Canada hoped Kashmir. bly has been oyershadowed so The Y scggey poradhsnad or of|far by other issues. a number Problems dealt ' with by the UN during the first MUST SETTLE COSTS half of its 20th session. Another matter of urgent im- Many of the items on this ses-|Portance is the settlement of the sion's agenda were a carry-over|Westion of peacekeeping. costs from the previous session which|@5 well as the establishment of had bogged down because of the|better peacekeeping machinery Soviet - American disagreement|--oth of utmost interest of Can- on peacekeeping costs. ada, along with disarmament. This problem was removed) The session was launched| during the dying days of the|during an atmosphere of co-op- 19th session when the Unitedjeration in the Security Council States decided not to press for|which led to the passing of re-| the prithdrawal of voting rights|solutions ordering Indian and] from nations two years in ar-|Pakistani forces to quit fighting) rears in peacekeeping costs. in Kashmir and along the 1,000-) While the 11-nation Security|mile border dividing the two Council grappled with the dis-/Commonwealth countries. pute over Kashmir, the General] Assemb1 y President Alex Assembly threw its support be-|Quaison-Sackey, foreign minis hind Britain when the white-mi-|ter of Ghana, opened the new nority-ruled colony of Rhodesialsession and then was slicceeded| threatened to seize independ-|by the new president, Amintore| ence. |Fanfani, the Italian foreign Min- The oo, overwhelmingly | ister. approved two urgent resolutions) dad calling on Prime Minister Wil-| pont one 08 son to use military force if nec- essary as well as other means to prevent Rhodesian Premier Ian Smith from carrying out his threat after the breakdown of constitutional talks. TOUCHED OFF DEBATE | The Rhodesian questionjearly weeks of the session was touched off a heated debate in|chilled somewhat several weeks} the assembly which this year|later when the Soviet Union ac saw the seating of three new/cused Secretary - General U members--Gambia, the Maldive/Thant of over-stepping his man-| Islands and Singapore, jdate by setting up the new UN} An important step forward|0bserver mission on the Indian- was taken in the disarmament| Pakistan border and naming its field when the United States,|commander, Maj. - Gen. Bruce OTTAWA (CP) If Keith he said, was Nova Scot the Soviet Union and Britain--|Macdonald of Edmonton. Davey, national Liberal organ-|the "Stanfield machine", cou-\not very deeply." part in the Chinese-Indian bor- lder tension. Canada has told the General jassembly Communist China should be represented in a pro- posed; world disarmament con- ference and fias indicated that she would favor eventual seat- ing of the Peking government if it assumed a peaceful pos- ture, , The assembly still has much work before the end of the cur- rent session, expected shortly | -.. 70 THE SHORES OF VIET NAM Viet Nam, yesterday. Marines -wear protective life vests along with battle equipment, One Viet Cong was killed and a number of visit - by U.S. Marines run through heavy surf as they come ashore during joint Viet- namese - U.S. landing as- sault near Tinh Tay, South ito the assembly. The Pontift,| the action. The joint opera jmaking an unprecendented trip jto the Western Hemisphere, called for an end to war for- ever. | | ese fighting unit. (AP) The warm atmosphere of the it ROTA LTE Grits' Davey Can't Guess How Strategy Went Sour suspects were captured in tion marked the first time an American was in opera- tional control of a Vietnam- ia where government also cut for us, but ric cee Pai ct. ths eb White Collars Turned Blue As Staff Takes OverB-A Cocotte i CS ea a | WAS 6TILL AT WORK MANCHESTER, England \(CP) -- A television document- ary on crime in Britain was to have included an interview with a retired criminal. Plans had to be changed at the last min- ute when the man was arrested on a fresh charge of theft. TORONTO (CP) -- Twelvejworkers into line with auto,|: hours a day, a $12,000-a-year|steel and rubber workers. research chemist at the British) BA offered 35 cents over 214) American Oil Co. refinery injyears, said its wages are on a| nearby Clarkson loads cartons|par with the oil industry in Can-| of tins and freshly-painted oill/ada, rejected parity in wages) drums from a railway box car.|and benefits with United States| A purchasing depart-joil workers, and said it hadn't! ment clerk and a foreman roll|had a layoff since 1949. | drums from a conveyor belt and) The workers are represented) stencil a label of contents on/by the Oil, Chemical and) the lids. |Atomic Workers' International| A chartered accountant, in|Union (CLC) which has set) blue overalls and safety boots,|Monday, Nov. 15 as the start of] moves drums of grease from a|@ British Columbia-wide strike, filling machine to a storage|against other oil companies if) room with a fork-lift truck. |the BA affair isn't settled, An employee relations officer,|, Te sttike could then spread) whose normal job is interview-|'® Texaco, Shell and BP in On-| ing university graduates, tario and Quebec by the end) of the month. Imperial Oil work-| or gg ng ll gyal ers are not represented by the! ; ah union. | 1 gan : co my filling 300 The OCAW says there is more| Naa __ jat stake than a contract: It is) as Seg ot Ota ore, |fighting i hogs on bargain-| , ng agent for the em eS, staffs, British American Oil is\ ye pedi yd ra Be 7 : | "We've never really had bar-| continuing operations despite 4) gaining rights in the oil indus-| strike by 419 employees em wholtry,"" says Bob Kirk, a member walked off their jobs Sept. 15. of the union's bargaining com- The strikers walked out after|mittee, BA rejected their demand for) 'The companies have always a 55-cent-an-hour wage increase| presented us with a 'take it or} over two years, written job se-|leave it' package. We've always curity guarantees and upgraded|accepted it. We can't do this \fringe benefits to bring the|any more." market. Viet Cong Stages Ambush And Comes Out Minus 130 SAIGON (AP)--A Viet -Cong| Two Viet Cong were reported force ambushed a South Vietna-|killed and 18 suspects were de- mese unit on a main highway tained in the search-and-destroy west of Saigon today, but 130;mission 18 miles northwest of of-the guerrillas were killed by|Chu Lai on the coast of the combined ground and air ac-|South China Sea. No allied ca-| tion, a U.S. spokesman re-|sualties were reported, a U.S.| ported. military spokesman said. | The spokesman said U.S. and; The Americans went ashore | South Vietnamese planes ham-|Wednesday with the South Viet- | mered the attacking Viet Cong.|namese in the first joint am- He had no information on gov-|phibious operation of the war ernment casualties or other de-|against the Viet Cong. Col. Thell tails of 'the action five miles|Fisher of Springfteld, Va. was west of Baria. in command of the operation, A large force of U.S. marines|the first time an American was and South Vietnamese troops/Put in operational control of a pressed an offensive in sandy,|S0uth Vietnamese fighting unit. jrolling coastal terrain 350 miles! No major ground action was by Sparton Electronics is the first in a series of truly portable 12" TV/Radio to reach the Sparton didn't rush The Astronaut into production, They didn't try to beat the other manufacturers to the market. They perfected it first. That's why The Astronaut is probably the best 12" portable TV set on the market today. Come see it soon. Come and see the Sparton Astronaut in His Genuine Astronaut A truly ultra-light por- able weighing only 15 pounds, an ideal gift for the teenager in your family. Available in three models, fea- turing: TV/Radio Com- bination; UHF/VHF tuner. : 4995 three of the five nuclear powers} The Soviet union disagreedjizer, was planning another elec-|pled with _ Conservative prom-| He thought that Liberal ef- joined forces in supporting ajwith the stand taken by thejtion campaign in the light ofjises of increased old-age pen-|forts to meet the pension chal- compromise resolution calling|United States, Britain and an-|what happened Monday, what/sions, creamed the Liberals.|lenge by explaining the benefits for a quick agreement on ajada that the secretary-general|would he do differently? |Until the service vote is counted/of the Canada assistance plan| treaty to stop the spread of nu-|had acted under the terms of "I don't honestly know," he|Saturday, the province has\was "a clear failure... . It clear weapons. the resolutions ordering thejreplied. "It would take somelelected only one Liberal mem-|certainly didn't get across." France, another nuclear|ceasefire. She argued that that|time to make that kind of as-|ber. There were five in the last) Mr. Davey, who became na- power, abstained from the dis-|Was 3 matter for the entire Se-|sessment. : Parliament. jtional organizer in 1961, had armament vote taken several curity Council to decide. But he said all the informa- In the West, he said, the party planned to return to private in- hours before the start of a ma-| === ~~~ | tion available when the election|was up against traditional hos-\dustry after this election. Since jor debate 'on the seating of| jwas called easily justified the | tility toward the Liberals. "It's|the election he said he hasn't northeast of Saigon, but results|reported elsewhere in the coun- were meagre. ltry, Rare Dolphin Communist China, the fifth nu-| |belief that a majority jment could be attained, Zovern-/not just against this govern-|ad time to think of his own ment," he said, "This has been Plans. | The 39-year-old organizer, a\the case in four elections, |former. radio station advertising) Mr. Davey doesn't blame Mr. ister Gordon, the Liberals' jSalesman in Toronto, was "very|Pearson's campaign for. the|tional campaign chairmen, w depressed" over the | which failed to vault the Lib- jective. erals into their cherished ma-| 'The jority objective. jwe let the down." The biggest single clear country, in the world or-| @anization. | Canada supported the disarm-| Put On Show @ment resolution, sponsored by} eight non-aligned countries of} w.47 a sub | the 18-nation disarmament EO ager errs spe ag mittee. The resolution urged the) apd a ida buioce cack disarmament com mittee, of|"2'@ Species never betore kep which Canada is a member. ta alive in captivity, arrived Wed- draw up a treaty containing no|"¢sday, at the Niagara Aquar- "loopholes which might permit|um after an air journey from nuclear or non-nuclear powers|9°Uth America. to proliferate directly or indi-| A five-man scientific expedi- rectly, nuclear weapons in any|tion to the Amazon River cap- form." tured five dolphins. However, An increasing number of na-jone of the two rare sacred dol- tions spoke in favor of the ad-|phins died of pneumonia at mission of Communist China|Vero Beach, Fla., where they into the UN, with France being/had been flown a week ago among the strongest supporters.| An aquarium official on the The United States, however,|seven - hour flight from Vero continued to oppose the seating|Beach to the Niagara Falls air of the Peking government oniport reported no.. difficulties grounds that it is behind the|with the sacred dolphin or the war in Viet Nam and for itsithree pink dolphins. To All The People Of Ontario Riding... ito be most anxious for the el pension issue is prime minister) won," "Prosperity was certainly a cutjurging the prime minister Surprise-ifor us, and the issue of majority'dissolve Parliament. HALLMARK COLLECTION STEREO SCANDA "TR-30" 46950 YOUR COLOR TV STORE PARKWAY TELEVISION "We Service What We Sell -- Ourselves" 918 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Scandinavien modern styling featuring the Gorrard Dual 1010" changer; six balanced speaker system; 30-wott music power; 'solid state" circuitry; AM/FM FM stereo; provision for satellite sound and remote speokers. MY SINCERE 'THANKS' for the support you have given me. 723-3043 Mr. Davey and Finance Min- election|party's failure to reach its ob-\the two party officials believed one|tion, It was frequently reported "T really feelwhich Diefenbaker clearlyjduring the summer that Mr. Mr. Davey decided.|Davey and Mr. Gordon were na- ere ec- to| ts 7 -- ee vy ay 19 WatUllilig a Philips automatic TV like riding in a chauffeur- driven car? (Because you just sit back, relax and enjoy it.) Philips planned it that way. In fact, that's really the whole idea behind this new Canadian designed and built Automatic TV. Here's how it works: Instant picture & sound: | The Philips Automatic comes on in two seconds--with famous Philips sound automatically, and picture clarity. (You get an set it and forget it. exclusive 2-year guarantee on the direct- As for limousine vision picture tube--automatically), "looks," you have Automatic contrast and your choice of brightness: Twin electric eyes measure over 33 custom-designed wood changing light conditions in your cabinets and hand-rubbed finishes. living room. One adjusts the contrast. Crafted by the artisans of Strathroy. 'The other adjusts picture brightness Have your family "chauffeur" to give you the ultimate in viewing, take you to 'your Philips dealer--for a automatically. demonstration (antomatically). l Z~| PHILIPS APPLIANCES LTD=Television © Stereo Hi Fidelity * Radios « Household Appli * Lighting + Ind 1 Sound E: Tape Recorders * Business and Educational Equipment * Philishave Electric Shavers * "New-Life" Hearing Aids Trust in Philips is world-wide, VA COWAN Equipment Co, CHERNEY'S TED JACKSON MIKE STARR M.P. FOR ONTARIO RIDING BLECTROHOME STEREO HI-FI WITH THE DIFFERENCE 80 King St. East Oshawa Port Perry Bowmanville Bowmanville Phone 985-2272 Phone 728-1641 Phone 623-5689 HARRY LOCKE'S TV Sales & Service 20 King St. W. Phone 623-2312 MERCURY Furniture & Appls, Ltd. Harwoed Ave., Ajax Phone 942-3711

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy